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Collaboration tools: The CHEF and Sakai Projects

Collaboration tools: The CHEF and Sakai Projects. Charles Severance University of Michigan. Goals. Briefly cover our open source learning management and collaborative systems Focus on our Open Source experiences in these projects. Outline. Collaborative Activities at UM CHEF Technology

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Collaboration tools: The CHEF and Sakai Projects

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  1. Collaboration tools: The CHEF and Sakai Projects Charles Severance University of Michigan

  2. Goals • Briefly cover our open source learning management and collaborative systems • Focus on our Open Source experiences in these projects

  3. Outline • Collaborative Activities at UM • CHEF Technology • CHEF Features • CHEF Status • The Sakai Project • Sakai Technologies • Sakai Timeline

  4. CHEF 1 CHEF 2 Worktools (Notes Based) WTNG CTNG Coursetools (Notes Based) 1991 - 1997 2000 1998 2004 2002 2005 2001 1999 2003 Collaboration @ UM Sakai NMI Grid Portal NEESGrid Science of Collaboratories SPARC

  5. SPARC 2/2001 600 users 800 data sources

  6. CourseTools Michigan’s Coursetools has 42,000 users (2003) Indiana University’s OnCourse has 80000 users

  7. WorkTools Over 9000 users (2000 active) at the end of 2003

  8. Science of Collaboratories people-to-people Communication, Collaboration Services groups-to- information groups-to- facilities Distributed, media-rich information technology Digital libraries & documents Remote instruments http://www.scienceofcollaboratories.org/ NSF Funded.

  9. CHEF 1.0 • Fall 2001: CHEF Development begins • Generalized extensible framework for building collaboratories • “Best-of” CourseTools, SPARC, WorkTools • Integrate across projects and adopt relevant standards • Funded internally at UM as replacement for CourseTools • All JAVA - Open Source • Jakarta Jetspeed Portal • Jakarta Tomcat Servlet Container • Jakarta Turbine Service Container • Build community of developers through workshops and outreach

  10. CHEF Technology • Provide a mechanism for software development which will allow organizations to share and re-use each other’s work • Utilize existing technologies wherever possible and add value rather than invent all new • Enable code reuse across multiple organizations • Lead to portal technology - Jetspeed

  11. Not “just” a portal • Portals are a framework to deploy tools (aka rectangles) and focus on how the user wants to arrange their own “rectangles” • While CHEF technically is a portal, the goal is for the tools to work together closely and seem to really be parts of a larger “tool” • CHEF has a lot of features, (services, presence, notification, etc..) which bridge the gap between portal and application framework

  12. CHEF Implementation Architecture - More Detail Tomcat Servlet Container Jetspeed Portal Velocity CSS Tool Servlet Turbine Framework Turbine Service Turbine Service Turbine Service In addition to Jetspeed, CHEF operates within a Servlet container called Jakarta Tomcat. Whereas portlets operate in one “recatangle” which is a subset of the screen, Servlets control the entire HTTP response or even talk non-HTTP protocols.

  13. Example Architecture - Resources Tomcat Servlet Container HTTP WEBDAV Jetspeed Portal Velocity CSS Resource Tool Access Servlet Webdav Servlet Turbine Security Service Content Service User Dir. Service src/java/org/chefproject/actions/ResourceAction.java src/vm/chef_resources_show.vm (plus 10 more) src/java/org/chefproject/service/component/BaseContentService.java src/java/org/chefproject/service/component/BaseUserDirectoryService.java src/java/org/chefproject/service/component/ChefSecurity.java src/java/org/chefproject/servlet/ChefdavServlet.java src/java/org/chefproject/servlet/AccessServlet.java

  14. PERL-GridPort Perl-CGI Apache CHEF ArchitectureFlexibility: NMI Credentials Teamlets: Grid Service API Jetspeed CHEF Grid Service Component COGs MyProxy NEES Teamlet OGSA UserDirectory Provider UserDirectory Grid UserDirectory Provider Service CHEF UserDirectory Service Component Jetspeed Login Existing CHEF UM Code User IU Portlets LDAP GridFTP Proxy IU Code Jakarta Existing GRID UT Code

  15. CHEF General Tools • Announcements • Chat • Threaded Discussion • Calendar • Schedule • E-Mail Archive • Resources (including WebDav) • Web-Frame • Worksite Setup • Profile • Notifications / Subscriptions • Public View • Anonymous Comment

  16. CHEF - More tools • Course Management • Assignments • Drop Box • Worktools • Data Viewers (Live/Stored) • Telepresense • Video as Data • Electronic Notebook • Grid Technologies • Grid sign on using myproxy • Grid computational portal • GridFTP • ..Many more

  17. CHEF Applications • CourseTools Next Generation • WorkTools Next Generation • NEESGrid • NSF National Middleware Grid Portal

  18. CourseTools Next Generation Over 5000 users at the end of 2003 http://coursetools.ummu.umich.edu/

  19. Worktools Next Generation New WorkTools Sites being created in WTNG as of 12/2003 Run on the same servers as CTNG.

  20. NEESGrid - The Equipment Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation NSF Funded. NCSA, ANL, USC/ISI, UM, USC, Berkeley, MSU

  21. CHEF-Based NEESGrid Software

  22. NMI / OGCE www.ogce.org NSF National Middleware Iniative Indiana, UTexas, ANL, UM, NCSA

  23. CHEF is stable and released CHEF 1.2 from www.chefproject.org Workshops twice per year Technical support mailing list Collaborative site chefproject.org/chef/ Other derived variants of CHEF NMI 1.0 Beta from www.ogce.org NEESGrid 2.1 from www.neesgrid.org CHEF Status

  24. What is Next: SAKAI • U Michigan, Indiana U, MIT, Stanford, uPortal • All have built portals / course management systems • JSR-168 portlet standard requires us all to re-tool and look at new approach to portals • Course Management System Standards • Open Knowledge Iniative (OKI) needed full implementation • IMS standard such as Question and Testing Interoperability (QTI) • SCORM Course Content Standard • Why not coordinate this work , do the work once, and share each others solutions? • Integrate across projects and adopt relevant standards • Collaboration at the next frontier - implementation • Tool Portability Profile (TPP) • Truly portable tools and services • Tools built at different places look and feel the same and share data and services • This is difficult - Interoperability is harder than portability • Mellon Foundation funding

  25. Sakai Organization • To some, the real innovation is the organization • To get these schools/institutions to adopt a central authority (Sakai Board) for resource allocation of internal as well as grant resources • Goes beyond resources from grant • Required for closely coupled open source development, the ‘seed’ software? • Part of the open source experimentation

  26. Indiana Univ. Stanford Indiana Univ. U of Michigan U of Michigan MIT MIT Stanford uPortal uPortal Board Joseph Hardin, UM, Chair & Project Manager Brad Wheeler, IU, Vice Chair Jeff Merriman, MIT-OKI Amitava ’Babi’ Mitra, MIT- AMPS Carl Jacobson -JASIG Lois Brooks, Stanford Technical Coord. Committee Chair Chuck Severance Tools Rob Lowden Architecture Glenn Golden Local Teams Local Members

  27. Open/Open Licensing • “..all work products under the scope of the Sakai initiative for which a member is counting matching contribution and any Mellon Sakai funding” will be open source software and documentation licensed for both education and commercial use without licensing fees. Significant difference between a “product” and a “component” Unlimited redistribution is an important aspect of a license.

  28. SAKAI Overview July 04 May 05 Dec 05 Jan 04 Activity: Maintenance & Transition from aproject to a community • Michigan • CHEF Framework • CourseTools • WorkTools • Indiana • Navigo Assessment • Eden Workflow • Oncourse • MIT • Stellar • Stanford • CourseWork • Assessment • OKI • OSIDs • uPortal • SAKAI 1.0 Release • Tool Portability Profile • Framework • Services-based Portal • Refined OSIDs & implementations • SAKAI Tools • Complete CMS • Assessment • SAKAI 2.0 Release • Tool Portability Profile • Framework • Services-based Portal • SAKAI Tools • Complete CMS • Assessment • Workflow • Research Tools • Authoring Tools "Best of" Refactoring Activity: Ongoing implementation work at local institution… Primary SAKAI Activity Architecting for JSR-168 Portlets,Refactoring “best of” features for tools Conforming tools to Tool Portability Profile Primary SAKAI Activity Refining SAKAI Framework,Tuning and conforming additional tools Intensive community building/training

  29. Tools JSF or XUL GUI Layer JSR 168 Portlet JSR Servlet Standard Services Level 1-3 Inversion of Control Avalon, Turbine, OKI, Spring, Pico J2EE / EJB / Jboss - Enterprise Services Stateless Session Entity beans for clustering and scaling This is in progress Portability Profile (as of today)

  30. Sakai Architecture Portal Configuration Implementations Portal Technology uPortal 3.0 JSR-168 Technology Legacy Sakai GUI Portable code Channels, Teamlets JSR-168 Portlets Sakai Portlet Sakai Service Layer Sakai GUI Layer Mega-portable code CHEF Services OKI Services Sakai Services

  31. Sakai Timeline Architecture and Tool Development Dec 15 SAKAI 1.0 Whitepaper Pre-alpha release of SAKAI’d CHEF Architect Discussions: getting it right across schools July 1 SAKAI 1.0 available for testing by production facilities Feb 15 SAKAI 0.5 available for tool development Oct ‘03 Jan ‘04 Apr ‘04 July ‘04 Oct ‘04 Aug 1 Tools running in SAKAI 1.0 pilot/production environment at participating schools Feb 15 Developers’ Workshop: Coding SAKAI 1.0 using SAKAI 0.05 Nov 15 Requirements, Functional Design, UI, Full Spec Feb 1 Deliver full spec to programmers July 1 Final tool delivery to participating schools Tool Development

  32. CHEF Project Personnel Michelle Bejian Lotia Jim Eng Richard Ellis Glenn Golden David Haines Joseph Hardin John Johnston Louis King Dan Kiskis Peter Knoop John Leasia Hans Masing Brett Miller Daphne Ogle Diana Perpich Zhen Qian Hannah Reeves Marco Rocco Lars Schumann Charles Severance Gonzalo Silverio Joanne Yuanyuan Sui Stephanie Teasley Terry Weymouth David Whitehead Elizabeth Wilson

  33. Summary Points In the long term, thinking about a learning management system as a product is too limiting Campus Portal Learning Management Collaborative activity in large and small groups There are three phases of Open Source Development - it is hard to skip them Adopt and tinker Build your own, “sell it”, and recruit users and helpers (influenced by the late 1990’s in the US) Become part of something larger - release control to group - truly collaborative development - Easier when you have “won” in the previous step and it was not as fun as you thought… We must get beyond the notion that we are building a self-contained “product” and really we are building parts of an overall solution that others will reuse in ways we cannot imagine Open source development is not preparation for an IPO Measure success when something that someone else develops extends *your* software. In many ways Open Source Development is like Research - combination of a set of very deep skills where the value is in the aggregation of the skills rather than one individual.

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